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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  April 23, 2013 7:00am-9:01am PDT

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ions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com good morning to our viewers in the west. tuesday, april 23 2013. welcome to "cbs this morning." new details about the moments leading up to the boston bombings, and john miller talks with a s.w.a.t. team who put the surviving suspects in handcuffs. republicans try to blame the white house for massive delays at the nation's airports. >> in studio 57 pastor joel osteen and his wife victoria and harvey winestein. >> we begin with your world in 90 seconds. >> he will not be treated as an enemy combatant. we will prosecute this trust through the civilian system of
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justice. >> authorities charge the surviving suspect. >> dzhokhar tsavraev says he and his brother were religious views and had no terrorism. >> for plot thwarted by bliss in canada. >> two men in a terrorist plot backed by al qaeda. >> the attack was not imminent but the threat real. overflowing rivers in the midwest have flooded streets and homes. >> this could be spectacular. time to take the school boat to school. >> a nasty spring storm will dump half a foot of snow from colorado to michigan. >> heartbreaking to look at it. >> the faa is starting its furlough program, forced days off. >> delays at some of the nation's busiest airport. >> the government needs to get their act together. >> tsa, putting a temporary hold on the controversial policy change that would have allowed small >> a proposal to make it illegal to buy tobacco unless you are 21.
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>> and at the location where he dropped -- >> innocent men, women, and children. you get paid for it. >> which is your strongest -- >> honestly i don't know. >> is there someone we could call. >> freedom rock woodstock, and his songs were an an them for a generation. richie havens has died. >> i was never in show business. i was in the communications business. a rookie news anchor clemente, thought his knife was off. >> by the way, a.j. was fired today. >> and, man, that sounds like an idiot. >> this morning's eye opener presented by prudential. >> wel "cbs this morning." good morning, norah. >> good morning, charlie.
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welcome back. >> good to be back. the hospital treating the marathon bombing suspect was turned into a courtroom from his bed sineok charged with use of a weapon of mass destruction. >> it appears they were not linked to a terrorist group, but tsavraev is giving investigators new information. we have more from terrell brown. >> reporter: dzhokhar tsavraev is communicating with investigators mostly in writing, saying he and his brothers acted alone. court documents allege how he and his brothers allegedly carried out the deadly attack. as dzhokhar tsavraev lay seriously wounded in the hospital, the judge asked if he could afford a lawyer. he uttered just one word. no. the judge said i find the defendant alert, mentally competent, and lucid. the fbi is still trying to establish a clear motive behind last monday's marathon bombing. law enforcement says that it
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appears dzhokhar and his older brother tamerlan was by i ideology. chilling new details in a ten-page fbi affidavit. a few minutes after the surveillance video captured the brothers at the marathon they split up according to court documents. tarrer lan heads to the finish line as his younger brother blends in with the crowd. dzhokhar places his backpack on the ground. at 2:50 the first bomb explodes. according to the affidavit, virtually every head turns, stares in that direction in apparent bewilderment and alarm, dzhokhar appears calm walk as way without his backpack seconds later, it detonates in the exact spot where he was landing. during thursday's getaway, one of the brothers bragged, did you hear about the boston explosion? i did that. and dzhokhar's roomdartmouth, key evidence. a black jacket andhat.
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matching the clothing he was wearing at the scene. law enforcement sources say there are clear signs that tamerlan, the older brother, had become increasingly radicalized, motivated by jihadi websites. they picked the boston marathon and boylston street because it was a classic, iconic sporting event close to their location. >> what are we learning from tsavraev? >> yesterday as he was talking to authorities basic until writing, he can say basically one word at a time. they went through the public safety questions and really trying to find out, are you part of a group?accoun far is thathi was driven by his brother, mostly done online. and that there is no international terrorist organization behind it. now, there is an important
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caveat, everything he said or wrote has to be checked out. they are not taking that at face value. >> what are we learning about this rampage they went on on thursday? where they went after the m.i.t. officer? >> that's how it starts. the original question is they walked up to that starting linecar, they shot the officer unprovoked. why? the operating theory they were short one gun. the older brother had a gun, they wanted a gun for the younger brother, and the fastest and most efficient way they could think of doing it was a surprise attack on a cop, takes his weapon and go officer collier had a locking holster, like a three-way lock. if you don't know how to remove the gun, you don't know how to get it out. there was apparently an attempt to yank it and they couldn't get it and left. >> chilling details from the man who was carjacked. ally bragg abtheattack.
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>> that's right. they basically said we did the boston marathon bombing, the rest of the conversation is in russian. the carjack victim doesn't speak much english and no russian. he was debriefed very carefully. what else could you hear they said. the only word i recognized was manhattan, and that tripped a lot. that's why we saw last week, stopping the trains from boston to new york searching trains and nypd set out its network of license plate readers, all of the bridges and tunnels coming into the city and loaded all of the license plates loaded with these guys if they were headed to new york, they wanted to make sure that tripped before they got in. >> switch subjects and go into the other story, the police saying they have broken up canada's first ever terror plot linked to al qaeda. two men face charges of planning to bomb a passenger train and police say the suspects took "direction and guidance" from al qaeda based elements in iran.
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what do you know about that? what about using a train? is that new? >> well it is new, although they have always been focused on transportation but al qaeda's shadow government, if you will the leadership wasn't in pakistan escaped to iran and had kind of a -- a subcommittee of leaders in iran so there is some of the leftover people that may have communications and plots that they are moving forward, the one in pakistan have been under the gun from drone attacks and other things one fascinating tidbit. when they hid abadabad and search, they find a couple of things including a note sewn into his clothes and fo we really like to concentrate on trains. like to putether a so that trains will go off in derailment. he felt this was an area that there was lax security and could be exploited. something in the minds of al qaeda at the highest level. >> let's go quickly back to
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boston. do we know anything about what happened when the older brother went to chechnya? >> that is a big focus that is now between the fbi and the fsv which is to try and reconstruct. >> that being the russian intelligence. >> the russian fbi. try to deconstruct all of that. you can learn to make this bomb online. where would you have tested it out? you would have to go way out of boston into the woods or perhaps during that trip he got some of that training. >> all right, john. thank you. "the wall street journal" reports american investigators are looking at a report from russian intelligence that says accused bomber tamerlan tsavraev met with a sus to russia last year. >> in an interview with london's "telegraph," an interview from dagestan with his mother says he was on the radar since 2008. she claims her sons are innocent. >> what happened is a terrible
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thing. but i know my kids have nothing to do with it. i know it. i am the mother. i have -- i -- you know i know my kids. i know my kids. i -- i am -- really my kids would never get involved into anything like that. >> charlie, more from russia. >> reporter: tamerlan tsavraev was identified as a potential extremist two years ago. >> which means he was suspicious, and he was suspected of being somehow connected. >> reporter: a member of parliament said that's why russian agents tagged him to the fbi. >> they requested of the american side if they had any information of contacts with terrorists. >> reporter: there has been no direct link between groups in dagestan during his six-month visit last year. and dzhokhar said the brothers
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acted alone, but motivated by religion. questions remain whether it was during trips to dagestan that he became radicalized. dagestan, the center of a violent islamic insurgency and fighting security forces for a decade. the region is home to followers of a radical form of islam. when tamerlan returned last year his aunt said he looked like a typical american. judging by his clothes, the way he talked he looked like an american. he didn't fit in to our circle at all in the beginning, but then he adapted. he became more she says her nephew was no radical. as soon as tamerlan returned home to the u.s. he started a youtube channel, sharing propoganda videos of several radical islamists. for cbs "this morning." i'm charlie d'agata. up next an interview with
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the s.w.a.t. team officers that took tsavraev into custody. >> and nancy cordes is on capitol hill. >> secretary of homeland security janet napolitano testifying right now on the senate immigration reproposal. originally supposed to testify last week but had to cancel because of the boston investigation and the bombings are starting to seep buyinto the debate on whether to reform our immigration system. both sides accusing the other of politicizing the tragedy. at a senate hearing on immigration on monday new york's charles schumer struck a nerve when he said this about opponents of reform. >>rly those who were pointing happened. terrible tragedy in boston as a -- as -- i would say excuse for not doing a bill or delaying it. >> republican chuck grassley of iowa took offense. >> i never said that. i never said that. >> i didn't say you did, sir. >> i didn't say anything about -- >> i didn't say that.
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>> grassley is one of several republican who's are skeptical about immigration reform. and say the boston bombings carried out by two immigrants, demonstrate the need for caution in the air. this is how he put it on friday. >> given the events of this week, it's important for us to understand the gaps and loopholes in our immigration system. >> reporter: the immigration reform plan they are debating was crafted by a bipartisan group of eight senators and calls for $3 billion in additional border security funds, to hire more officers improve border fencing and increase drone surveillance, with the goal of stopping 90% of illegal crossings in high-risk areas. the next phase of the plan would grant temporary legal status to illegal imgrabts if they pay a $500 back taxes and get a job. they would have to wait ten years to be eligible for a green card, three more years to be
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eligible for citizenship. it is a pathway to citizenship. it wrangles some like ted cruz of texas. >> any bill that insists upon that jeopardizes the likelihood of passing any immigration reform bill. >> reporter: no question the pathway to citizenship will be the most contentious part of the proposal and that is why the bipartisan gang of eight works so hard in the month leading up to the release of the plan to get influential outside groups like the chamber of commerce on board. air travelers bracing for more delays this morning. the judge refused to stop the furloughs of air traffic controllers.blame for severe flight delays ash the country. jill a sharyl attkisson joins us. >> reporter: the third possible delay of flight delays due to
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furlough of air traffic controller. the delay stretched from coast to coast. by the end of the night, l.a.x. had one of the biggest backups, nearly two hours. >> the government needs to get their act together with all of this. >> reporter: dealing with the fallout, nearly 15,000 air traffic controllers ordered on furlough by the faa two days a month, to help achieve $637 million in mandatory budget cuts. >> how we are going to handle it? i don't think anybody knows for certain at this tykeparticular time. >> reporter: they are delaying landings on the ground and spacing them in the air. >> this doesn't make any sense why we would do this we will furlough air traffic controllers it will have an impact on delays and jobs in our state. >> reporter: republicans in congress blame the president, sweeting with the #obamaflightdelays.
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john boehner wrote, faa has flexibility to cut costs without delaying air travelers. why won't president obama let them? but the president's transportation department head says there was no other choice. >> we cut contracts, we eliminated temporary employees, we looked everywhere possible to avoid the kind of furloughs that are now taking place. >> reporter: he puts the blame on congress for agreeing to automatic, across the board budget cuts. >> now it's up to congress to look at a very dumb way of budgeting and change it. critics point to other areas of the faa they say could be cut instead of air traffic controllers, for example, a three billion airport improvement fund that so far hasn't been touched by the budget cs. char much of the midwest is expecting rain today. that means more trouble for cities and towns along the mississippi river. they face serious flooding when the big river crests later this week. other areas underwater right now. dean reynolds in peoria
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illinois. the river is reaching a record high crest. >> good morning, charlie and norah. you can see peoria bracing for bad news. sandbags up along the illinois river and to the west along the mighty mississippi. just months ago, the mississippi was at some of its lowest points in history. today, that has given way to record high levels. causing flooding across the region and threatening one of its strongest industries shipping. portions of the river were closed late monday after it swelled nearly 12 feet over flood stage. pouring over levees and into towns just north of st. louis. >> water is a engine ofction.and it is totally capable of destroying anything that man can build. >> and with stormy weather expected in some of the hardest hit towns, the efforts to fend off greater damage continues. in spring bay, illinois, a town of 500 people where the rising
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li'l illinois river has damaged 45 homes, fire chief dennis perry says there are people here who refuse to leave. >> they don't want to go. these people have lived on the river a long time they know what floods although this is a record flood, they have decided to stay. >> reporter: the river here hasn't been this high for 100 years. >> the river is quite a ways from us. a quarter mile from where we are at. >> a quarter mile from where we are? teresa is right on the shoreline. >> water to the north, water to the west. >> yes. >> and w south. >> yes, we are on a shrinking peninsula. >> surrounded by sandbags she is confident for now. >> right now, we have power, two sump pumps going, and the well is holding. i think we'll be all right. >> reporter: well, the rain today certainly won't help because even without it the river's expected to rise another foot beyond where it is today.
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charlie, norah. >> dean thanks. time to show you this morning's headlines from around the globe. nicaragua, police have nabbed one of the fbi's most wanted fugitives. eric justin toth former teacher wanted on child pornography charges. he replaced osama bin laden on the most wanted list. the washington post china is responsible for the majority of cyber spying around the world. out of 120 cases last year 96% from china. the wall street journal, the wrong diagnosis the most common error by doctors. it can result in permanent injury or death for 160,000 we are looking at mostly sunny skies around the bay area today. a little fog has moved back in along the coastline. but otherwise, it's been breezy in spots inland early on today. and we have a wind advisory up through the delta and the carquinez strait. that has also helped to stoke these temperatures a few degrees, too. 60s into livermore, also 66 in
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vallejo. 65 in san francisco right now. this afternoon, 70s even some mid-80s inland. 60s with patchy fog toward the coastline, cooler weather through midweek. >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by roc skin scarecare. the anti-ageing experts. coming face to face with the accused marathon bomber. >> we don't know if he has a weapon or some type we're looking for some time of explosive ignition switch he
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can reach down and hit. >> this morning, john miller with the men who captured dzhokhar tsavraev. >> mark sanford fights to keep his political comeback alive. will this ad help voters forget about troubles with his ex-wife? >> plus they may be slow but one breed of snails causing massive destruction. how florida is trying to stop them. on "cbs this morning."
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on an apartment building at good morning, everyone. 7:26. i'm frank mallicoat. get you updated on some bay area headlines now. oakland police are keeping an eye on an apartment building on international boulevard and 65th avenue. late last night they surrounded the complex where a shooting suspect is believed to be hiding. they have been there since 10:30 last night. two more fire stations may be closing down in contra costa county in the fire protection district. the issue goes before the
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county supervisors this morning at 9:00. budget cuts have already closed four stations in the area. san jose officials are closing a homeless camp in kelly park. apparently 175 people have been living there for the past months. traffic and weather coming up. stay right there.
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good morning. if you are traveling up and down the nimitz, 880 in oakland, it looks okay by the oakland coliseum. it's a little farther south. southbound 880 near tennyson, there is an accident there just cleared to the right-hand shoulder. unfortunately, there is some stacking up just behind it. over at the bay bridge, the metering lights have been on since 5:58 this morning and still jammed through the maze. that's traffic, here's lawrence. >> lots of sunshine to begin the day although we have starteds to some changes now. high pressure weakening and some patchy fog moved in along the coastline but not the santa clara valley. looking good over san jose. lots of sunshine there. the winds kicking up into the delta and the central valley. wind advisory in effect there. could see some gusts to 40
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miles per hour. but otherwise, the temperatures up in the mid-80s inland. 70s and 80s inside the bay and 60s toward the coast. cooler with more fog over the next few days. the humble back seat. we believe it can be the most valuable real estate on earth. ♪ that's why we designed our newest subaru from the back seat forward. introducing the all-new,
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completely restyled subaru forester. love. it's what makes a subaru a subaru. >> top ten signs the first day as a news anchor man did not go well. number eight, weatherman tells you to expect an 80% chance of unemployment. number three, receive congratulatatory phone call from sue simmons. >> we'll tell you how to get the most. [ bleep ]. >> there was a moment. >> the number one sign your first day as a news anchor didn't go well aspire to be the next ernie. >> takes a tough man to make a
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tender forecast. >> good thing we didn't make the top ten list. we'll have more in the 8:00 hour on this young north dakota anchor. >> and what happened to him. >> yes. >> coming up this half hour former south carolina governor mark sanford may be running out of time. his comeback campaign has two weeks ago.'ll show you is still tripping him up. >> you wouldn't want to trip over these. giant snails on the march in south florida. we'll find out why people want to get rid of them as fast as they can. >> many heroes in law enforcement last week in boston but this week we want to you meet four men. they took the most wanted man in america into custody. senior correspondent john miller is back with us. >> good morning, charlie. these four men were called into action as dusk was falling on boston and it appeared the sole surviving bomber was nowhere to be found. >> shots fired! >> reporter: with the city of boston still in lockdown friday
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officers kenny tran jeff campbell and direct brian got the call they were waiting for. what's the first thing you hear when that bell rings? >> an officer calling out shots fired over the radio. that's when we just grabbed our and ran back and got in the truck and started heading in that direction. >> reporter: in your mind what did you think you were going into? >> we knew we were going into what we believe was a culmination of this whole week. >> reporter: it was a week that saw two terrorists paralyze the city and critically wound richard donohue, a fellow transit police officer who was on their mind that night. >> to us we're all family to each other and always watching each other's backs. it was very important. >> reporter: they soon found themselves on the scene where dzhokhar tsarnaev was hiding on a boat and they got an assignment. they would be the arrest team. >> once that got to the point
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where they were actually had some kind of dialogue with the suspect on the boat they wanted a plan put in place that way if he did decide to turn himself in, that way we could just get in there and just go ahead and make the arrest. >> reporter: at some point they call and say, in. what happens from there? >> we all jump in the stack and we started to move up toward the boat after we were given the green light to go. >> reporter: you're moving toward an individual who has allegedly killed one officer, severely wounded another, one of your own partners what goes through your mind as you approach this boat in this stack? >> at times like that you can't think about what has happened in the past. you know you're going after a dangerous suspect. you still have to keep your mind in the game. >> reporter: so their minds were in the game as they approached the boat. what's the first you see of the suspect? >> i saw the suspect sitting up on the gunwale of the boat with
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one leg hanging over the side and his hands were just sort of down by his side. he looked weak. he was shaky. appeared to be losing consciousness and did have some wounds to his body. >> reporter: what are you telling him to do? >> we're commanding him to get down off the boat because we don't know what he has on the inside of that gunwale where his other hand is. if he has a weapon or explosive ignition switch he could reach down and hit. >> reporter: is he answering? >> he's not. he's just staring at us. we waited to a point to where we were getting closer to hipm and both hands came up we saw both hands were open. we bolted ahead in front of the shield. it was the one chance we had and we wanted to end this for everybody. >> reporter: i wonder what it's like when you're in a tactical mode and you think i have a suspect. he may have a bomb on him. >> your training kicks in. you can't be scared. you just got to do the task at hand. >> reporter: it becomes a little
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bit of muscle memory. once in custody, the officers searched dzhokhar for any weapons or explosives. who cuffs him? >> i cuffed him. >> reporter: with the cuffs you carry all the time? >> yes. >> reporter: what was it like to be the person to put the handcuffs on probably the most wanted >> at that time you don't think about that. i put the cuffs on. brought his hand around. someone else holding the other hand. these guys are helping me along with other people. we cuff the other hand and we move out. >> reporter: does it run like a movie through your head? >> everything ran like a movie through my head thinking about what we did and how we did it and the satisfaction of knowing we could tell officer donohue that we got him which we did today. we walked into the room. we told him we got him. and it does feel good after a while. >> reporter: these s.w.a.t. officers don't consider themselves heros. just ordinary men called in extraordinary circumstances to do their jobs.
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>> the law enforcement officers, the firefighters, the emts and the civilians, families that were at the bombing on marathon day, everybody in the city acted as one family. they were phenomenal. >> that is mesmerizing. what a the handcuffs? >> their plan was to get the handcuffs and present them to officer donohue's family saying as he fights to recover in the hospital, these are the handcuffs that we put on the bad guy who did this to him. unfortunately the handcuffs went off with the prisoner into the ambulance and that officer wants his handcuffs back. >> as a memento. >> they're going to mount it on a plaque and give it to the family. i said do you have the serial numbers? he said there's a name on it. so you stole these handcuffs from somebody else and now somebody took them from you. >> never mind that. we'll find them. >> as you point out, officer donohue was a transit police officer. this just happened to be transit
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police s.w.a.t. >> at the scene it's chaos. the fbi hostage ric commander starts to dole out assignments. you're perimeter. your cover. you guys will be the arrest team. we're going to be the arrest team on the guy who shot officer donohue. it was coincidental but extraordinarily special for them. >> based on your experience what kind of impact will this have on them? >> i think it will have an impact. not just the incident but the whole week. i can tell you for sure that between the officers who were in the gun battle the day before and throughout that week this is the kind of thing where they're going to slow down right after this. it will probably be wise to seek some kind of counseling because these guys are running and gunning all the time but after a week like that and that kind of intensity, you really need to step back and take a look at how it affects you. >> john miller, thank you. we want to turn to this political story about mark sanford. his political comeback is taking a new turn. voters decide in two weeks if
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the former governor should be sent back to congress. he's trying again to explain a dispute with his former wife. jan crawford is on that story. jan, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. let's go back to last week. first, there are the court documents that reveal his ex-wife accused him of trespassing at her home. right away he lost his f backing from the national republican congressional committee. now, in today's episode, sanford is trying to get a hold of this story with a long explanation. mark sanford is acknowledging it was a rough week after a tough couple years. >> i've been unfaithful to my wife. >> reporter: nearly four years of his admission of the extra marital affair which destroyed his political career now sanford's private life has again gone public. and he's airing things out. with a full page ad in the charleston post and courier. it's been a rough week. i would really appreciate you reading this.
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>> there's no way to spin this ad as a good thing. >> reporter: in the 1,200 word ad sanford explains why didn't tell his -wife he would watch the super bowl with one their sons. tell as to whether i made the right call in that instance as a father. this comes just two weeks before his showdown at the polls with democratic rival elizabeth bush sister of comedian stephen colbert. in spite of the fall from grace he's worked to overcome his former mistress is now his fiance and this month they made their first major public appearance together. but political redemption remains a work in progress. >> a lot of bumps in the road in the world of campaign. nothing more than that. >> sanford is going on the offense. he's out with a new television ad. he's accusing colbert bush of being in the pocket of big labor unions.
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this is a solidly conservative district they're in so that tie to big labor would be a negative. if sanfordo colbert-bush, it's an the voters have had enough of his personal life. >> jan crawford thanks. mark sanford got hammered. putting out an ad saying a tough week for him after a week in boston and what the people in boston have gone through. seemed out of touch. and now to this story. miami is being overrun by giant snails. it might sound a bit like a bad horror movie but this is a true story. we'll go on the hunt this morning for some of these creatures but also explain why this is really an important story. they eat almost anything. they make a giant mess and apparently they're not tasty as es cargo and thursday join us for thursday's interview with former president george w. bush. that's where charlie was yesterday. he was at his presidential library. that museum opens in dallas on thursday. i know you're going to talk to him about the attacks in boston. that will come up on thursday
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for cbs this morning, >> we're seeing strong winds in the delta and carquinas straits, mid-60s in vallejo and
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livermore, 64 this afternoon, plenty of sunshine, 70in on the coastline. an online magazine is getting new scrutiny this morning following the boston bombing. some call it a how-to guide for making bombs. john miller looks at the magazine's pop connection to the boston suspects. that's ahead on "cbs this morning."to y eye on her... but, i didn't always watch out for myself. with so much noise about health care... i tuned it all out. with unitedhealthcare, i get information that matters... my individual health profile. not random statistics. they even reward me for addressing my health risks. so i'm doing fine... but she's still going to give me a heart attack. we're more than 78,000 people looking out for more than 70 million americans. that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare. [ sonic boom ] did somebody just...? impossible. ♪ yes. yes. yes. noooooooo!
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you can't say on local television or national television. a young tv anchor said two of them in his first day on the job. now he has thousands of fans. that's ahead on "cbs this morning."
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with depression, simple pleasures can simply hurt. the sadness, anxiety the loss of interest. the fatigue and aches and pains. depression hurts. cymbalta can help with many symptoms of depression. tell your doctor right away if your depression worsens, you have unusual changes in behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens and young adults. cymbalta is not for children under 18. people taking maois, linezolid or thioridazine or with uncontrolled glaucoma should not take cymbalta. taking it with nsaid pain relievers, aspirin or blood thinners may increase bleeding risk. severe liver problems, some fatal, were reported. signs include abdominal pain and yellowing skin or eyes. tell your doctor about all your medicines, including those for migraine and while on cymbalta call right away if you have high fever, confusion and stiff muscles or serious allergic skin reactions like blisters peeling rash, hives or mouth sores to address possible life-threatening
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conditions. talk about your alcohol use, liver disease and before you reduce or stop cymbalta. dizziness or fainting may occur upon standing. simple pleasures shouldn't hurt. talk to your doctor about cymbalta. depression hurts. cymbalta can help. k9 advantix ii not only kills fleas and ticks, it also repels most ticks before they can attach. the leading brand kills, but doesn't repel. a tick that isn't repelled or killed may attach and make a meal of us. get veterinarian recommended k9 advantix ii! these are our ocean spray 100% juice blends with no added sugar, just one glass equals two servings of fruit. very fruit-tritious. or, trray lighving o and no added sugar. with tasty flavors like cranberry-pomegranate and cranberry- concord grape, it's like a fruit stand in every bottle. just...you know... demonstrating how we blend the fruits. try all our tasty ocean spray
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7:56. the lockdown on international boulevard in oakland is over. for much of the night officers tried to find a suspect who shot a man in the leg but after hours of searching they came up empty. millions watched across the world as a biologist worked with falcon chicks this morning, the parents called the building home for years. the expert placed a band on the little ones so they can now be tracked. stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. there's a little bit of slowing right now coming up northbound 680 into danville an accident blocking one lane. we're beginning to see backups southbound out of walnut creek as well. highway 4 is super busy from antioch, and now the brake lights continue into concord. and muni seeing days by the van ness station. here is more. mostly sunny skies, we've seen some fog move on the
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immediate coastline, a thick layer of fog on the deck. sunshine over coit tower with blue skies above. the temperatures, well, it's fairly warm. 64degrees in san francisco, 68 in santa rosa, windy in the delta and central valley. a wind advisory there, highs cooler, still up in the mid-80s inland, 70s and 80s around the bay, 60s toward the coast.
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being called the "vanity fair" for terrorists. and pastor joel osteen and wife victoria are here. we'll ask them about the power of faith. but first here's a look at today's "eye opener at 8." >> court documents reveal how he and his brother allegedly carried out the deadly attack. >> from his bedside, tsarnaev has been charged with using a weapon of mass destruction. he could face the death penalty. >> he looked weak. he was shaky. appeared to be losing consciousness. >> what was it like to be the person who put the handcuffs on probably the most-wanted man anywhere? >> satisfaction in knowing that we could tell officer donahue th l.a.x. is bracing for a thir due to the faa's air traffic control furloughs. the sandbags are up here along the illinois river and to the west along the mighty mississippi. sanford loses, if he loses to bush i think we see a clear sign that voters have seen
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enough of his personal life. miami is being overrun by giant snails. >> there is no predator for the snail except us. the royal canadian mountain police or mounties have thwarted an al qaeda-inspired terrorist attack. a word to our friends up north. you canadians are a brave and heroic people. if i have said it once this is the one time i said it. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. the next step for boston marathon bombing suspect y tindict >> tsarnaev is now charged with using a weapon of mass destruction. he could also face the death penalty. terelle brown is in boss opinion continue >> reporter: as you mentioned, he was officially charged in the boston marathon bombing, in those charges, one count of using a weapon of mass
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destruction. tsarnaev claims that he and his brother acted alone, that he was not part of a more broad or more large foreign or domestic terror group. but investigators do believe there is evidence that the older brother, tamerlan had become increasingly radicalized, inspired by jihadi web postings. what the fbi still does not have at this point is a clear motive for the bombing but believe that the brothers picked the location because it was a nearby target and also because it's a classic, iconic american sporting event. where we about three blocks awa inl led since the bombing. but yesterday the fbi handed the scene and the street back over to the city. so boylston street and the heart of the back bay could be back open to the public sometime this week. charlie? norah? gayle? >> thank you. parts of the flooded midwest are bracing for more rain and that means more flooding. the mississippi river in grafton, illinois, is ten feet
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love flood above flood stage. it's blamed for at least three deaths. in minnesota it's the snow making driving very dangerous, covering parts of the upper midwest and central plains. richie havens was one of the most unlikely stars of woodstock. the 72-year-old folk singer died yesterday. anyone who's seen the woodstock movie will remember his music. ♪ sometimes i feel like a motherless child ♪ >> reporter: richie havens was woodstock's opening act. he was scheduled to play just four songs, but because no other performance could get through theassive kept going and going until he ran out of materia >> they could not find anyone. >> reporter: havens was forced to improvise. the result was the song "freedom." ♪ freedom freedom ♪ >> that was the first time i ever sang it was right on the stage at woodstock, piecing it together with my feelings of the day which was freedom is what it
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was all about. ♪ freedom ♪ >> reporter: "freedom" became an anthem anthem, and it came straight from the park. stephen sills issued a statement. richie havens was one of the nicest, most generous and pure individuals i have ever met. ♪ for many havens personified the most positive aspects of the '60s generation. he fought for social and environmental causes throughout his life. >> he had he sang about politics and when he sang about freedom and democracy and the power of the human spirit, he connected with people. ♪ oh what a beautiful morning ♪ >> reporter: despite releasing two dozen albums over a career spanning more than three decades, he had just one top 20 hit. ♪ it's been long ♪ >> reporter: still his cover
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version of "here comes the sun" was everything that richie havens was, hopeful, reassuring a universal message, that life is worth living. ♪ here comes the sun ♪ ♪ and i say it's all right ♪ ♪ yeah yeah yeah ♪ow when musicianse,ey somehow c our life more than most people because we remember something and where we were. >> yeah, that stands out. how nice to be remembered as one of the nicest individuals, a pure individual. that's a lovely thing for someone to say about you. >> very lovely. someone we also think is lovely, cbs sportscaster jim nantz who we like. he reportedly had an elaborate plan to deal with the blackout at this year's super bowl. most of the superdome went dark in the third quarter. remember that? according to "sports business journal" says nantz he wanted to jump from the broadcast booth, grab a ledge and lower himself into the stands. from there, he wanted to run onto the field and report what was going on.
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lance barrow who was producing for cbs thought better of the idea and kept nantz in his seat. >> they're probably going thank you, lance barrow. doubt me, don't. jim nantz. live television can be shall we say, a dicey thing, especially when mistakes can last forever on the internet. ben tracy shows us a north dakota tv news anchor who's learning that lesson the hard way. >> reporter: first days on the job can be tough. this one was awful. >> [ bleep ] gay. >> good evening, i'm van tieu. >> a.j. clemente apparently unaware he was on the air swore as he got flustered practicing his lines for his first time behind the anchor desk. he then tried to recover. >> thanks, van, i'm very excited. i graduated from west virginia university, and i'm used to you know, from being from the east coast. >> reporter: after the newscast
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clemente used twitter to explain himself. "tough day. thanks for the support. we all make mistakes. i'm truly sorry for mine. i'll try my hardest to come back better and learn from this." the nbc station in bismarck north dakota suspended them. >> your first day as a news anchorman did not go well. number eight. weatherman tells you to expect an 80% chance of unemployment. >> reporter: but clemente has turned from internet joke to internet folk hero. people are flooding the station's facebook page calling for him to be rehired. >> what in the name? no! >> reporter: clemente's mistake reminded some of "anchorman" ron 'burgh burgundy." >> and i'm ron burgundy. go [ bleep ] yourself, san diego. >> ah! >> reporter: but reporters don't have to curse to become internet fodder. >> at the location where he dropped his -- please don't do
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that. where he dropped his knapsack. >> typically what is left is the people walking around with this glazed look in their eyes. >> reporter: jessica sanchez confronted this super bowl reveler crashing her live shot. >> reporter: so how long have you had an std? >> i don't have an std. >> reporter: then why did you want to talk? >> oh my goodness. >> reporter: then the pair of fox anchors in philadelphia who after wrapping up an awkward interview with ryan lochte. >> thanks we'll be watching you. >> reporter: proceeded to mock him. they didn't get in trouble. in fact, they still have jobs. and clemente he at least have a a twitter hash tag. #keepj #keepaj. ben tracy, los angeles. >> was he wrong? absolutely. and he will learn from that mistake. he will never do it again. >> that may be the best thing that happened to a.j. >> somebody will hire him.think it's goi "cbs this morning," but i feel
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for him. >> you know who he is don't you? >> yes, a.j. there are there are places to learn about terrorism, and one of them is an online magazine called "inspire." john miller has read it and he'll show us how it influences people who may threaten america. plus "all that mattered" eight years ago, a long night for an nfl prospect. do you know who that was? that answer is next on "cbs this morning." xt on "cbs this morning."
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i woke up with this horrible rash on my right side. an intense burning sensation like somebody had set it on fire. and the doctor said, cindie, you have shingles. he said, you had chickenpox when you were a little girl... i said, yes, i did. i don't think anybody ever thinks they're going to get shingles. but it happened to me. for more of the inside story visit shinglesinfo.com ok so i've been having an affair of sorts with greek nonfat yogurt loaded with protein 0% fat that thick creamy texture, i was in trouble. look i'm in a committed relationship with activia and i've been happy and so has my digestive system.
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"all that mattered" eight years ago today, aaron rodgers was set for the nfl draft. as a top prospect rodgers thought he'd be an early pick. instead, he waited 4 1/2 hours to get drafted 24th by the green bay packers. he reflected on draft day with
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scott pelley. >> you're going to draft so well that they put you in the green room and put a camera on you. >> bad decision. you're wishing you were anywhere but there. >> today rodgers has a super bowl title to his name and is regarded as one of the best quarte this year's nfl draft begins thursday night at radio city music hall here in new york. >> so it shows you when things don't always go according to plan, they work out. >> they get better. >> they work out. harvey weinstein is one of hollywood's most powerful producers. he is here. he's coming here to studio 57. we'll talk about his latest movie plus all the changes going on in the film industry. harvey weinstein ahead on "cbs this morning." this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by prudential. every challenge is an opportunity. prudential. bring your challenges. we gave people a sticker and had them show us. we learned a lot of us have known someone who's lived well into
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it will push us forward because this is boston. a city with courage. compassion. strength. that knows no bounds. >> that's boston mayor thomas menino part of a new short film made by two boston natives. in the barnicle name sounds familiar, they are sons of mike barnicle barnicle. it is raising money for help families most affected by the boston marathon bombings. to find out how you can help, go to onefundboston.org. welcome back to "cbs this morning." >> many people are wondering how the tsarnaev brothers may have learned to make those explosives. you can find instructions for pressure cooker bombs all over the internet. john miller found a magazine that's helping teach would-be
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terrorists. >> reporter: in the boston bombing, they used pressure cooker bombs packed with nails to maximize damage. >> shrap e direction. it hit the crowd and caused devastating injuries and death. >> reporter: bomb technicians from around the world recognized a familiar recipe. these were the same bomb kpoep components and explosives accomplished in al qaeda's magazine "inspired." what are similarities you see? >> auto mirror image. almost exactly from that manual or what seems to be recovered in boston. >> reporter: the glossy online publication is produced by al qaeda in yemen. it debuted in 2010 and has become the vanity fair of terrorism. it was founded by two americans,
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anwr awlaki and its editor. both killed by drone strikes in 2010 but "inspire" magazine in a prior edition how to make a bomb in the kitchen of your mom explained how to make pressure cooker bombs noting it's the most effective method and to place the device in a crowded area. it's all done with common hasan household ingredients. how readily available are those materials? >> i can purchase every you need within 45 minutes in local shopping. >> reporter: for a total of -- >> $75. >> reporter: this photo shows jose pimentel using bomb blueprints to assemble this device. pimentel planned to attack u.s. servicemen and new york city
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police two arizonayears ago. the pipe bomb is the same one used by the boston bombers to ey at police during a standoff last week. is it bomb making for dummies? >> the issue is that it does work and we've seen that. we've seen it time and time again. our problem now is since 9/11 is transnational recruiting through the internet for sympathizers that are in our country. >> reporter: investigators are looking to see if the tsarnaev brothers ever read "inspire" magazine but it may provide clues on where the next plot may be coming from. >> john, why can't they shut it down? >> it's a game of whack-a-mole. it will show up elsewhere. it goes viral in that community. >> you can learn how to do it but you have to test it. that's the question i want to know. >> that's what they are looking
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look at them kids. [ sigh ] they
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minutes supervisors in contra costa county take up budge that would a good morning. 8:25. in about 30 minutes, supervisors in contra costa county take up budget cuts that would affect fire stations, four stations have closed. no cuts would includes closing another station by july and one early next year, there would also be staffing reductions. encouraging news about san jose police, a report finds citizen complaints about the conduct of officers decreased last year by 7% and the number of complaints that resulted in officer discipline after internal review was also down, it went from 10% of cases in 2011 to 3% last year. a key step in the court ordered reform of the oakland police departcompliance director is expected to present his proposed work plan and
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budget to city officials, thomas frazier was appointed by a federal judge last month. stay with us, traffic and weather coming right up.
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good morning. it's slow and go right now up and down the nimitz freeway. 880 in oakland passing the coliseum, northbound lanes, as you can see, then it starts to clear up closer to the downtown
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exits. the bay bridge metering rights remain on, the backup to the macarthur maze. silicon valley out of milpitas, highway 4 cleared in bay point, brake lights from antioch to concord. we've got sunshine, the winds are kicking up in the delta and central valley. blue skies in most areas as we look from the mount vacca cam, the temperatures are warming up nicely, many spots in the 60s. 50s toward the coastline, we've seen patchy fog there. toward the afternoon, patchy fog likely to continue toward the coast, 60s for highs. in the bay abundant sunshine, mid-80s in the valleys. the next couple days fog and cooler temperatures.
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we have pictures of the duchess of cambridge. you can see the baby bump. she's expecting in june or july. she was in manchester england, this morning announcing a new school counseling program. she looks beautiful. >> she looks great. really great. i love a pregnant woman. i do. it's such a wonderful time. i like it. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, pastor joel osteen and his wife are here. they know people are asking questions about god. we'll talk about keeping the faith in a moment of crisis. >> howard feinstein is a brand new dad. we'll learn about that and the story behind his newest movie. >> it's time to show you this morning's headlines from around the globe. "usa today" looks texting while driving. a new study finds using a voice
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to text app while driving is no safer than while texting with your fingers. drivers took twice as long to react when they were texting no matter what method they used. anthony weiner is back on twitter. he resigned two years ago after a sexting scandal you probably also remember began on twitter. >> the website deadline hollywood says seth mcfarlane has been asked to return as host of the academy awards. he is reconsidering but he may be tied up with a new film. the boston herald says a dance teacher injured in the marathon bombings vows to dance again. 32-year-old adrian los her left leg below the knee. she says next year she is going to run the boston marathon even though she has never been a runner. if that doesn't give you chills and inspire you, wow. >> i believe her too.
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the boston globe reports the newspaper received an act of kindness. the chicago tribune sent dozens of pizzas to the globe staff on monday in a note the tribune said "we can only imagine what an exhausting and heartbreaking week it's been for you and your city. you make us all proud as journalists." >> boston is trying to return to normal. about 1,000 people gathered on boylston street yesterday. at the white house president obama observed the moment of silence in the oval office and this is boylston street this morning. it's expected to reopen in sections over the next few days. many people in boston use faith to get through the trauma of last week's deadly bombings. so did the people of west texas, after that fertilizer plant exploded. joel osteen is senior pastor of america's largest church in houston. joel osteen and his wife are
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here. victoria is a co-pastor there as well. good morning. it's good to see you. i want to start with you, joel. you say every day is a gift from god. i think those words are so hard to believe right now to people in newtown, connecticut, in boston, and certainly in your state of texas. >> well i see that the opposite in the fact that look how quickly life was taken away. we have to appreciate gifts each day because we don't have a guarantee of tomorrow. our hearts break for those people. there's no great words to tell them. >> how do you do that joel when you're in such pain to look at it as a gift? concretely, what do you say exactly? what are words you use? >> wt i tell people that just lost a loved one, god still has you in the palm of his hand.es there aren' right words. you sit with them. you weep with those that are weeping. i encourage them to take it one day at a time. you get up and think i can't go on for six months. can you do it for 24 hours? god will give you mer and grace for ev >> it was nice to see in boston
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that interfaith service that the president attended and spoke at. what do you think about that gathering and why religion becomes such an important point of healing after a tragedy? >> i think many people want to turn to their faith. you want to turn to something bigger when you don't understand something. i think it's great that the whole community can come together and put down all of the different things that separate us and just believe there's a time of healing when we come together like that. >> why does it take such a tragedy? why couldn't it be -- i wonder when we have a terrible tragedy and you see different faiths why isn't that we don't behave this way ahead of time? do you know what i mean? >> i understand exactly. it seems like when something large happens, it's out of our control, that's when we kind of have to come together. i think that's the way it is. this was so out of our control that everyone had to cling to one another and the place when you have that support and i
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believe that sometimes when we're out of control, we have to let god be in control. whether we like the situation or not, now i just say to people who have loufst their lives or their children don't run from god at this time. run to god. i like to say this your loved one is with god. if you want to be close to your loved one, run to god because that's the closest that you're going to be. >> what's the place for forgiveness? >> i think it's important. it's hard to forgive right at first especially when you have lost someone. i think over time you have to let it go because it just poisoned your own life. encourage people, charlie, this sounds hard. i haven't been through what they've been through. you can't let one event ruin the rest of your life. >> i think about the richard family though. their 8-year-old son is dead. th a leg.the mother i sti hospital with a serious head injury. how do you forgive these boys who did that to your family? >> you know --
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>> forgiveness really is the truth is for ourselves. you're not forgive or excusing what they did but you are releasing yourself from bitterness. you're releasing yourself from heartache. so i really believe that forgiveness is for us and so that's where you have to draw the line. you're not saying i forgive you because it's okay. i forgive you so i can go on. >> does everybody deserve forgiveness? i wrestle with that question. does everybody? >> i think again, gayle, you have to say i'm doing it for me. i need my emotional energy. if i have this anger and hate and pain that i'm holding for somebody else that's emotional energy that i can't give to my family and to my own dreams and it doesn't make our mind to forgive somebody that calls it evil. you have to say i'm doing it for myself. >> all right, joel and victoria osteen, nice to see you. thank you so much. harvey weinstein likes a challenge. anybody who knows him says that about harvey weinstein. we'll talk about the threat to the film industry from tv to the
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new movie rating system and his later feature film. harvey
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>> you claim that it was remarkable. i agree. winds down there move from east to west. but it is also the case that he could not have traveled because his people had no boats. >> but they had rafts. they had boats that were rafts. >> harvey weinstein's latest film recounts the story of an expedition across the pacific. it is one of the many things on the mind of this oscar winning producer. harvey, welcome. >> nice to see you all. >> there's also this new son in your life. after how many daughters? >> four. >> fourdaughters. >> if it leagues, i would be batting .200.
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1 for 5. >> you decided on the name daschle? >> on the first date i took my wife out. i think she's really pretty. >> she is. >> you will confirm that. she walks into the restaurant and she trips and falls and just right on her butt. i go first there is a god. that evened the playing field right away. secondly i said to her, that was the opening scene when she walked into william powell in the thin man. you meet norah charles. she's walking her dog. she has a couple bags. she does a somersault and falls on her butt. when we had a boy, it was a chance. >> could you have gone with ty he would be the only tyrone weinstein i would bet in the country. you have four girls. when you had the boy, did you
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say finally. you would have been happy with another girl i know. you are the kind of dad that really wanted a son? >> yeah. i am so tired of going to "forever 21" and i hope they're not sponsors. on sundays i wake up and the game is on. they go at the mall. you're driving us to the mall. then they say dad, park three miles and we don't want to be seen with you. meet us at the pizza store four miles over here. we're embarrassed and you're annoying. >> i did that with my dad. drop me off a couple blocks down. i'm glad it happens to harvey >> i morning with four girls, i'm happy to go to work if they agree with me. losing every morning is horrendous. >> what happened in china so they shut you down? >> there was some scenes in the film that the chinese didn't
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feel were -- >> about sex or violence? >> a combination. no politics. a combination. we made some cuts in the movie to accommodate them. i believe the movie will be up and running soon. >> it's a big audience. >> it's a big audience. i don't think any of us want to ignore that audience for a few cuts in the movie. >> i'm always fascinated by your selection process. you don't always pick things that seem like sure-fire hits like "the artist." no way i thought it would work. it won an academy award. what was it about this based on know? >> when you see me gayle, i have to champion the lost causes for a company. we have movies with julie roberts and you'll see me choose movies and my marketing department says you chose it you sell it. last time i did it was "the
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untouchables." this is a story that will prove how it was settled rather than the belief that polynesians settled peru. a genius explorer after world war ii inspired everybody. i read this book when i worked in the drugstore at jewel pharmacy in queens when i was 14 years old. i used to take my bike and finish deliveries quick, sneak into the basement and read the new book. this is new in paperback. my dad read it. it's a father/son book. i spoke to president clinton last week and his grandmother gave it to him. it's a whole chain. it's a great action adventure. >> who would believe "life of pi" did as well as i that's a closest for an audience understanding what this is. >> and he can't swim. i couldn't believe it in the movie. he cannot swim. >> i'm proud of the movie.
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really proud of the movie. that's why i'm here. >> looking forward to seeing it. >> by the way, politics are coming. i can smell it. where is president obama? let me get him on the phone. >> we don't have much more time but there's a story that seth macfarlane is going to be back. do you know anything about that? >> i was the one who got michelle obama with my daughter to do the academy so i'm just wondering if they ask me this year who i have to do but i have the phone number at the vatican and if that's -- >> you can deliverpope.harvey. >> he was funny and good. >> thank you harvey. the movie opens this friday in new york and los angeles. >> and you could get a chance to see one of the most famous symb
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>> you might have caught charlie sunday night on "the good wife." he played charlie rose her husband's run for public office. >> currently ahead with female voters, do you think they see in peter something they do not trust? >> i think it's because the press has been more interested in peter's past failings as a family man for which he has long since atoned than they are in the present one. >> that's an interesting idea. what is it you mean specifically? >> i'm not going to give up my day job. >> clearly you have a future in film. also there's a new website i
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found. it's called right or rude. they list the most polite celebrities and we're having to say that charlie rose was chosen as one of the polite celebrities. what did they say? he has a gracious manner and way of getting awkward information from a guest. they like your southern charm. >> my god. i didn't know that. >> and george clooney is also on the list. he's a man of humanity a genuine man of substance. not bad company to be in. >> movies about the "titanic" as i try to get out of this also feature a scene involving musicians onboard. the band leader's violin could go up for auction. we look at the extraordinary piece of memorabilia that may or may not have been on the ship. >> reporter: it'sgage immortalized where the band played on to calm the "titanic's" passengers as chaos and icy waters swept over
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and sank the unsinkable. a scene later revisited in james cameron's version. the story is real by survivors' accounts and unlike the fictional jack and rose there was a real life star. >> yes indeed. he was well known to be a celebrity. >> reporter: an historian has written the definitive biography of wallace probing the facts and fiction surrounding the band master, the band and the violin that it wast from his fiance and an inscription on a silver plate reads for wallace on the occasion of our engagement. a musician, wallace's gig on the ship of dreams would be an opportunity of a lifetime for a
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lot of reasons but he only found fame after his final act. if the violin survived the one wallace played that night on the deck, that's music to it the ears of leading "titanic" auctioneer. the 34 year old music's body was found floating in the freezing water ten days after the ship wreck among 1,500 people who perished. >> the story goes that in the final moments, wallace used this bag to protect the one thing t to him, his he strappeund shoulders above his life jacket in the hope that he and his violin would survive. >> reporter: although some personal belongings were noted in the paperwork for body number 224, initially there was no mention of a violin among his possessions. in the days that followed newspapers reported that wallace had been found with the
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instrument. in her diary, maria robertson thanked canadian authorities for its return to britain. after her death in 1939 the violin wound up forgotten. a stowaway in an attic until it was rediscovered. your heart must have leapt when you saw it? >> i had a funny feeling. >> reporter: he wasn't the only one with a funny feeling. few dispute it's his violin critics became skeptical it was the one he was playing that fateful night "titanic" and it wasn't a fiddle. >> we contacted forensic teams. >> reporter: microanalysis found evidence of salt water corrosion consistent with wood in fining metal screws on silver played having been exposed to sea water over time. no signs of a forgery. it's as old as it looks. how much do you think it might be worth? it could fetch millions when it goes up for auction.
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a regular violin in this condition would hardly be worth $20. >> they don't come much more iconic than this. >> reporter: this one recalls an infamous tragedy in the heroic act of a man who had a chance to flee but instead stood and played. >> interesting story. >> amazing story. survived through everything. >> good to be back. >> good to have you back
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headlines... san francisco good morning. 8:55. i'm michelle griego with your headlines. san francisco's city attorney wants to know why nevada is dumping psychiatric patients in northern california, as many as 1500 low income and mentally disabled patients got one-way bus tickets from a state run hospital in las vegas. the california highway patrol will continue to help
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patrol the streets of oakland, the chp may expand its patrols from two days a week to four. oakland is also working on a new contract with the alameda county sheriff's department to keep deputies on patrol twice a week. construction begins for hoover elementary, it not held students in 30 years, neighbors filed a lawsuit the project citing increased traffic a narrow roads. here is lawrence with the forecast. >> we've got great weather around the bay area today, maybe not quite as warm as yesterday but still beautiful out there over the bay, looking good right now. sparkly waters, blue skies, the winds have been kicking up though. in some valleys, the fog has also made a return to the coastline, a sign of some cool weather in the works. still, the mid-80s inland, 70s and 80s around the bay, 60s with patchy fog toward the coast. the next few days low clouds and fog, cooler temperatures,
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warming up over the weekend. your time-saving traffic is next.
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good morning. we're still seeing delays over the bay bridge, the toll plaza has not thinned out much, stacking up towards the overcrossing, 15 minutes or so, 15 to 20 minutes to get on the bay bridge. the metering lights are on. live traffic cameras, 880 and 237, there was a stall reported in milpitas by the interchange, and the drive times still
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backed up, 14 minutes between 880 and 101, other drive times, we're seeing the eastshore freeway, 33 minutes from the carquinas bridge to the maze on westbound 80, still busy on the nimitz and westbound 580 through the altamonte pass and livermore valley.
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wayne: one more time!you've got the big deal of the day. who wants to make a deal? jonathan: a trip to fiji! - oh, my god! amazing! jonathan: it's time for “let's make a deal.” now, here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady. wayne: welcome to “let's make a deal.” i'm your host, wayne brady. what we do is make deals not just any deals. because this is super deal week. “what's a super deal, wayne?” i'll tell you. if one of our traders wins big if they win the big deal then they're eligible to play for the super deal
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where they have a one in three shot of winning an additional $50,000 in cash. that doesn't happen anywhere. where does that happen? right here. someone could walk away with over $71,000 in cash and prizes. that
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